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NUKEWARS
Israel must not gamble with its security: minister
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 15, 2013


Majority of Israelis oppose Iran nuclear deal: poll
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 15, 2013 - Nearly two thirds of Israeli Jews oppose a deal being reached between world powers and Iran on Tehran's controversial nuclear programme, the results of a survey published on Friday said.

When asked "Should Israel support or oppose the nuclear agreement being discussed with Iran?" 65.5 percent said they were against it, and 16.2 percent expressed backing for an accord.

The remainder of those asked in the poll conducted by the daily Israel Hayom were undecided.

The question was put to 500 people estimated to be a representative sample of the country's Jewish population, and the survey had a margin of error of 4.4 percent.

No Israeli Arabs -- who make up 20 percent of the population -- were among the 500.

Israel and world powers suspect the Islamic republic's programme of uranium enrichment to be a covert drive to acquire a nuclear weapons capability, an allegation vehemently denied.

The survey also showed 52.4 percent supported an Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear facilities in the event of a "bad deal" and if Tehran pursued its nuclear ambitions.

But 26.8 percent said they would oppose such an attack.

A strong majority of 68.8 percent said they believed the Israeli military was capable of going it alone in a strike on Iran, however.

Israel is widely thought to be the Middle East's sole -- albeit undeclared -- nuclear power.

It has clashed publicly with the United States on the draft deal being negotiated between Iran and the so-called P5+1 -- Britain, China, France, Russia, the US and Germany.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants international sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme to be tightened even further.

But US President Barack Obama favours the option of talks along with a gradual easing of sanctions.

Israeli Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, sent by Netanyahu to Washington to campaign against the nascent nuclear deal, accused the US on Thursday of gambling with Israeli security.

With Iran's economy squeezed "now is the precise time to tell them, 'either or'. Either you have a nuclear weapon programme, or you have an economy, but you can't have both," the leader of the far right Jewish Home party said in a speech.

The Jewish state fears that a nuclear-armed Iran would be a threat to its very existence, and has not ruled out carrying out a pre-emptive assault against Tehran's nuclear facilities.

An Israeli minister insisted Thursday that now was not the time to gamble with the Jewish nation's security amid moves to reach a peace deal with the Palestinians, and renewed warnings against lifting sanctions on Iran.

Israeli Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, in the US amid an Israeli campaign against a nascent deal being negotiated by western powers with Iran, spoke out against moves that in a first phase would apparently allow Tehran to halt but not dismantle its nuclear program.

The tough sanctions now in place against Iran must not falter, Bennett insisted in a speech to the Brookings Saban Center for Middle East Policy.

And on the dragging negotiations with the Palestinians, Bennett said: "While I yearn for peace I do not believe that now, is the right time to gamble with our security" pointing to the regional chaos unleashed by the Arab spring.

With the Iranian economy squeezed "now is the precise time to tell them, 'either or.' Either you have a nuclear weapon program, or you have an economy, but you can't have both," said Bennett, the leader of the far right Jewish Home party.

"It's like a boxing match where the other guy's on the floor and the referee's counting six, seven, eight, nine and at this very last moment we go and pick him up and let off the pressure. Now's not the time to let up."

He insisted the goal of the negotiations being led by six powers -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- should not be just pausing Iran's suspect nuclear program but dismantling it completely.

"I'm convinced that if we ratchet up the pressure we'll get the right deal," he said.

Bennett alleged that with 18,500 centrifuges already, Tehran could potentially make seven-and-a-half bombs a year, estimating that would give it a breakout capacity to nuclear weapons capability of only six weeks.

"Israel will never outsource its security. And our track record speaks for itself," Bennett said.

In 1981 Israeli bombs had destroyed a reactor being built by late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, and "in 2007 we allegedly did the same in Syria."

"Twice we saved the world from mad men with nuclear weapons. We did so because we understood our place in history. We did so because we understood our responsibility."

Israel has never publicly acknowledged the September 2007 strike on a mystery target in the Syrian desert, believed to have been a nuclear plant.

Bennett accused Iran of planning just to sit back and "slow down the production right now and wait for an opportune moment right now when the West is busy with some crisis" and then turn it back on.

"We cannot sit quietly as the West rushes into a deal with Iran that could be catastrophic. A deal that does not dismantle Iran's nuclear program will enable the Islamic republic to become a nuclear state. That's what we call a bad deal."

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